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TECH PEOPLE LEADERSHIP NEWSLETTER

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A weekly newsletter of curated links giving help, advice and opinion to leaders in teh tech industry.

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THE ARCHIVE

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FEEDBACK

13 Questions to Get More Feedback From Your Team - Programming Leadership - Medium

Easy read, useful stuff. Exactly what it says - ways to start the “I want feedback” conversation with your team.

Disrupting Bias in Feedback — Jill Wetzler

A cool, practical post outlining specific ways to notice, and then disrupt our own biases when giving feedback. Great piece.

MEETINGS

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Feedback
Meetings

The Disciplined Pursuit of Less

This is interesting: success leads to opportunity.  Opportunity leads to confusion, which prevents the next stage of success, and can sabotage what’s there already. So how to strip out options, reduce confusion, figure out what’s important?  Neat article.

The iOS Economy, Updated | Asymco

OMG the scale of Apple’s business!  This year revenue from the App Store will exceed ALL worldwide box office revenues.   Fun facts and charts.

Tim Harford — Article — How to Think, in Eight Easy Steps

How to behave in a civil, successful conversation. Short post, easy, valuable tips.

How Not to Be Offended | The Unbounded Spirit

This may be a bit abstract, but I love the title, and it’s a great read.


“…the majority of people in our world say and do what they do from their own set of fears, conclusions, defenses and attempts to survive. Most of it, even when aimed directly at us, has nothing to do with us”

Minimum Viable Conversation

Another great title, which provokes us to think about some basics: what are we trying to communicate? who to? what context do they have? Short, smart and thought-provoking.

Stop Answering Your Own Questions – Camille Fournier – Medium

One of those great, easy to understand, easy to do, hard to remember tips. Boils down to “shut up and listen”, but Camille Fournier states it more politely than that. Love it.

It’s Never Too Early to Fire – Andreessen Horowitz

Tough love from A16Z. Yes, we should give people the benefit of the doubt. But we almost always, at least early in our careers, overdo it.


“So what do you do when you start getting this pit in your stomach that the senior executive you had so much hope for — that was going to take your darling, ambitious, visionary startup to the next level — might not be doing, well, exactly that?


You fire them”

You Can’t Feel Regret If You Follow Your Instincts – Savage Thoughts

Don’t know if I agree with the title (OK, let’s be honest, I don’t). But I do like the emphasis on not burying the instincts and intuition that got your company (or team) started as it scales to “grown up size”.

10 Hard Truths About Management No One Tells You – ThinkGrowth.org

Some good reflections on management. The sections on dealing with emotion, and self-regulation are well-worth the read.

Most managers are scared to talk to their employees — Quartz at Work

Results of a recent poll of what managers find hard.  Pretty interesting. Communication is the core of the job. And it’s hard.


“a full 69% of respondents said that they found “communicating in general” to be the hardest part about communicating with employees”

Managers Are Blowing It

A short rant (not by me) about the implications of the “communication is hard” story above.

7 Questions Successful Managers Ask Their Employees - Business Insider

Yes, a listicle, but a good, practical one: excellent questions for going deeper into conversations with team members and co-workers.  And the author’s book - The Coaching Habit - is a very neat introduction to coaching at work.  Worth checking.

Avoid Asking Why, And What Good Leaders Say Instead

Those of you who’ve worked with me know the “ask what, not why” mantra.  This is good, short re-introduction to the practice of digging into issues without putting a person, or team, on the defensive.

The Power of AND (Ed Batista)

Very cool post from Ed.  Another word substitution: “and” instead of “but”.  As in “I know you’re trying hard, and it’s not enough” vs “I know you’re trying hard, but it’s not enough”.   See the difference?  Pretty neat.

1 Tool That Will Make Your Conversations Flow Better | Inc.com

OK, not strictly about questions, but about what to do once you’ve asked a question: wait!   It’s actually tricky to do - to embrace the discomfort of not knowing what the other person is going to say.

Elevate your conversations in 2018 | SmartBrief

Some good, even essential, advice for starting difficult conversations, and staying on track.

Strategic Decisions: When Can You Trust Your Gut? | Mckinsey & Company

Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman spent decades looking at all the ways we incorrectly think we know what we’re thinking (see “Thinking Fast and Slow” for the gospel).  This is a neat discussion about when we might “trust our gut” (not a lot) and when we might want to think things through some more.

Intuition vs. Rationality: Where One Stops the Other Starts

A kind of (much) shorter version of the above post.  Nice summary.


“Intuition can be thought of as subconscious pattern matching, honed over weeks, years, and decades. The more we are within our circle of competence the more likely our intuition proves correct”

Influencing Upward: The Skill You Need to Get Ahead

Yes, managing up is a skill.  And if you do it well, your boss will thank you mightily for it.  And, no, managing up is vastly different from “kissing up”.  This post is a nice introduction.

Build a Healthy Organization by Thinking Like an Engineer

Loved this: a very structured approach to building a human-centered engineering team.  Nice!

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